An intermediate reel in the key of G played by George Fowler w/ Doug Protsik, introduced in 2008.
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Loons

You are a Loon (fiddle level 4 Adult ) if you can play several tunes, are working on playing at faster tempos, and are ready to learn tunes in several keys and rhythms. You are experienced in learning by ear. If this is too basic for you, you have the option of moving to the Herons nest. If it is too difficult, you have the option of moving to the Owls nest.
Steve’s Letter to the Loons (click to read)
Virtual Maine Fiddle Camp – Loon’s Nest, February, 2021
Steve Muise [email protected]
Welcome to the Loon’s nest!
I’d like to work on the following (through using fiddle tunes of course) – coincidentally these are the elements that will help build your overall musicianship.
• playing in tune • posture tips
• shifting
• vibrato
• bowing / tone (Bringing life to the tune)
• Ornamentation
• discovering the keys/scales and chords that go with the tunes (great for adding theme and variation, and ultimately improvisation)
• chromatic scale (so we can get at some notes like f natural, c natural, B flat, etc.) • adding harmony (2 and 3 parts)
• musicality (building ways for you to add your own style!)
Tunes:
You will find the pdfs of each tune, with chord changes, plus recordings in our Loons folder.
“The Snowy Path”, beautiful slip jig, where we can talk about bowing/articulation “The Skater’s Waltz” – (great vehicle for vibrato, rubato and more)
“Snow Deer” – great for ornaments and doublestop drone strings
“Crooked Stove Pipe” – this one will have us shifting into 3rd position a bit!
I’m looking forward to making music with you in our virtual Loon’s nest!
Sincerely, Steve
Hey everyone,Steve here!
I’m very happy that you’d like to participate in our Virtual Ensemble!Follow the directions, move with the music, and have your videossubmitted to the dropbox by Saturday Feb. 27! Link below.
Have fun!Thank you!
Here is sheet music for the tunes Steve will teach:
Virtual Ensemble Information (click to read)
Here is general information about participating in a virtual ensemble.
Steve has published a video master track for The Skater’s Waltz: https://youtu.be/McbTv_LeVTQ
Here is the link to submit your video, a Dropbox account is not necessary:
https://www.dropbox.com/request/XbWh7Solbu3uHyj2erVE
After you have recorded your video, use the link above to send it to us. Photos or videos of your skating adventures are also welcome! Use the above link to send these along.
If you need technical help, you can email [email protected] and someone will get back to you
The most important thing is to have fun participating and remember we all sound better as a group!
Steve’s Parting Note To Campers
Hi everyone!
I just wanted to take a moment to thank all of you for participating in our VMFC first ever “Winter Edition”! It was really fun to lead you through 4 winter tunes in our Loon’s nest – what a great big group of positivity! I wanted to let you know that I appreciate each one of you, and I hope that you’ve had fun and are lookingforward to working on the tunes.
I hope to see you in our “Skater’s Waltz” virtual Loon’s nest video, instructions are on our Loon’s page on the VMFC website. We would like all of the “Skater’s Waltz video submissions to be uploaded to the dropbox folder link(again on the Loon’s page) by Saturday, February 27.
I also got a message that for a moment, Skater’s Waltz couldn’t be downloaded – I have since changed the video’s settings, so that should be resolved.
I’m including bonus spotify and itunes links of a recording that I made with my dad in 2008 called “across the bay of fundy”. It’s a cd of original and favorite tunes from what my dad and I grew up playing – my dad and I joke that we’ve known each other our whole lives! We recorded the cd at my alma mater, Berklee College of Music in Boston.
Crooked Stovepipe on Spotify:https://open.spotify.com/track/41cX3J84Ns8PBUWGJlY66j?si=f719d6cf46154e74Crooked Stovepipe on itunes:https://music.apple.com/us/album/red-wing-crooked-stovepipe/283784668?i=283784829
A few people had emailed to say that they didn’t receive the initial emails that I sent out this week, so I’m including those messages below.
Make music!
Merci mille fois, and be well!
Steve 🤓🎻
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Old-Time Country Dances
Most of the tunes we learn to play at Maine Fiddle Camp are from dance traditions: jigs, reels, waltzes, hornpipes. Every evening at Maine Fiddle Camp you will be offered the opportunity to participate in an old-time country dance. You can dance, or play in the dance band, ukekestra or great horned owls. Every dance is taught by the caller so there is no need to be bashful. The dance band is an all-comers group that plays familiar tunes, all instruments and levels are welcome. See below for some of the tunes that might be played. At the end of the dance, there is usually a foxtrot and waltz played by the great horned owls (all brass instrument players welcome) and backed up by the ukekestra, an all-ukulele rhythm section that frequently sports as many as 35, or so, players. A wonderful group experience!
Here is a non-exhaustive list of dance tunes that might be played at an old-time country dance at Maine Fiddle Camp:
Marches
Bonapart Crossing the Rhine
Road To Boston
Down the Brae
March of St. Timothy
Meeting of the Waters
Pete’s March
Jamie Allen
On the Danforth
The Girl I Left Behind Me
Gone A’rovin
Polkas
Denis Murphy’s
John Ryan’s (DumDum)
Britches Full Of Stitches
Bonnie Tammy
Camptown Races
Waltzes
Amelia
Ashokan Farewell
Midnight on the Water
Seamus O’Brien
Varsovienne
Reels
Cold Frosty Morning
Crooked Stovepipe
Edmund Parizeau
Flopeared Mule
Flowers of Edinburgh
Galopede
Gaspe Reel
Golden Boy
Golden Slippers
Green Mt Petronella
Joys of Quebec
Kitchen Girl
La Bastringue
Liberty
Liza Jane
L’Oiseau Bleu
Louis Cyr
Old French
Eddie’s Reel
Over the Waterfall
Pays du Haut
Rakes of Mallow
Red-Haired Boy
Redwing
Reel Semeur
Reel St. Antoine
Seneca Square Dance
Silver and Gold
Soldier’s Joy
Spootiskerry
St. Anne’s Reel
West Fork Gals
Whiskey Before Breakfast
Jigs
Aunt May’s Canadian Jig
Fair Jenny
Hundred Pipers
Indian Point
Jefferson and Liberty (The Gobby-O)
Jimmy’s Favorite
Kerfunken Jig
Kesh Jig
Korolenko
LeTourment
Little Burnt Potato
Maison de Glace
Moon and Seven Stars
My Darling Asleep
Out On The Ocean
Road to Lisdoonvarna
Steamboat Quickstep
Gigue des Sucres
Swallow Tail
Off She Goes
Old Favorite
Morrison’s Jig
Cock of the North
Star Above the Garter
Spotted Pony
Teviot Bridge
Hank Washburn
Hank Washburn has been fiddling at contra dances and Irish sessions for, like, ever. His first exposure to Irish music was in the last century in Philadelphia, where he was graciously encouraged by Mick Moloney and many other musicians at the Commodore Barry Center. On moving to Maine, he played for contras with the Back Bay Banana Band (now the Crooked Stovepipe), and later with the Usual Suspects. He currently plays with the bands Racket Factory and Dromore Bay, and has also accompanied singers Steve Richardson and Ruth Hill. His other preoccupations include shoveling snow, obsessing about politics and baseball, and working with kids.